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Tribal People of Laos
BY Joel Halpern
and I'cter Kr~nstadter
O by Joel M. Halpern James A. Hafner
and Peter Kunstadter
1990
Reprinted by Dalley Book Service 90 Kirnball Lane
Christiansburg , VA 24073
Phone: 7031382-8949
BY Joel Halpern and Peter Kunstadter
Laos is a land in the middle. Her heterogeneous population
reflects her position on an ethnic watershed, and her history tells re-
peatedly of struggles to control the land which lies south of China,
northeast of Burma, east of Thailand, and west of Annarn. The s t r u g -
gle continues today, more o r less openly, despite the "neutralization"
of Laos following the 1962 Geneva agreements.
On the one s ide Thailand gives aid to her allies in the Royal Lao
Government (Chalermnit 1961; Murphy 1965: 122 f f . ) , with considerable
assistance from the United States. And on the other side, beginning as
early as 1951 (Burchett 1959: 89-91) the Communists of North Vietnam,
the Chinese and for a time the Russians, have given aid to their allies,
the Pathet Lao (e . g. Le Kham 1961; Sheehan 1965; broadcast of Radio
Pathet Lao 26 July 1965, 26 Oct. 1965; Radio Peking 22 Dec. 1965).
The Chinese have also had a long interest in Laos. Chinese HO
(Yunnanese) invaders or raiders repeatedly sacked the north of Laos.
The successors to the Nationalist Chinese are reported to have troops
in the area near h a n g Prabang (Radio Pathet Lao, 26 July 1965). .Corn-
rnunist Chinese are reported to have supplied advisors to the ~ a t h e t Lao
and to have sent construction crews to build a road from China to Phong
Saly and to Ban Houei Sai on the border with Thailand (Sutherland .- 1963;
Fall 1965: 193; Radio Pathet Lao broadcast 5 Aug. 1965; New York
Times 17 December 1965). Fall even claims that Laos now has better
road communications with China and North Vietnam than with its non-
communist neighbors (1965: 193). The Chinese have also supplied
economic and cultural missions in Xieng Khouang Province (report of
Radio Pathet Lao 27 July 1965).
Likewise, though they have been required by the Geneva agree-
ments of 1962 to withdraw their troops, the Americans are involved in
backing their Thai allies and in providing continued support to the Royal.
Lao Government in the form of economic aid and refugee aid programs
(Ward ' s paper) which have allowed the Royal government to retain some
control over the mountainous areas where the Pathet Lao have had some
of their greatest military and political successes (cf. Fall 1965). Laos
also figures importantly in the Vietnamese war, since the H o Chi Minh
trail from North Vietnam passes through Pathet Lao-controlled south-
castern Laos, through an area populated predominantly by "Kha" tribes-
men (New York Times, 17 December 1965, p. 2; 9 January 1966, pp. 1-3).
The present boundaries of the Kingdom of Laos a r e the result of
the French colonial period; in particular their form w a s set as the'
result of contests between France, Britain, and Thailand for the territory
which lay between Burma and the French interests on the Indochina coast,
as well as conflicts over access to China.
Laos was not a unified state when France intervened in 1893. -
A Laotian kingdom, Lan Xang, with its seat at Luang Prabang, had
once ruled over much of the lowlands of what w a s to become Laos,
and also over much of Northern Thailand. The power of LanXang
had long since declined, as the country was caught in a series of wars,
and was invaded repeatedly by Burma, Thailand, and Annam. There
were also wars among the three principalities into which Lan Xang had
split: Luang Prabang, Vientiane, and Champassak. Xieng Khouang has
had a somewhat different history. This princedom w a s annexed by Annam
in 1832 (Dommen 1965: 8, and Mathieu 1959: 40).
The French were seen as protectors from the incursions of the
Siamese and Annamese, at least initially when they established their Pro-
tectorate of Luang Prabang in 1893. ' The princely family of Champassak,
in soathern Laos, was under Siamese influence. These old principalities
retained political significance: Prince Boun Oum of C hampassak was
Prime Minister at the time of the ascendancy of the Rightist General
Phoumi Nosavan between 1960 and 1962 (see Domrnen 1965: 29, et seq.
for information on Boun Oum ' s career). In Xieng Khouang the descendant
of the princely family serves as governor under the Royal Lao Government.
Eviderttly he still retains some thoughts of autonomy and h i s relations to
tribal minorities (specifically Meo) reflect this position (see Barney's
paper)
Nominal independence from France was regained &ter the Second
World War, and the conditions of foreign intervention were set at the
Geneva Convention which ended the French-Indochina War in 1954, and
the Geneva Agreements of 1962.
The problems of building a modern nation in Laos are complicated
not only historically and politically, as already indicated, but also by
features of economy, geography, and demography. Laos is landlocked.
Her route to the sea via the Mekong River must pass through both Cam-
bodia and South Vietnam, and the way is blocked by the Khone Falls on the
border with Cambodia. Goods shipped through Thailand, by rail from the
port of Bangkok, must be ferried across the river, since no bridges cross
the Mekong into Laos. All other routes to the south are overland across
rough country and poor roads. Thus Laos is entirely dependent upon her
neighbors for contact with the outside world.
Since Laos has no major industries she is dependent on foreign
sources for almost all manufactured goods, and depends on foreign aid
for most of the money with which to purchase them. Laos is even de-
pendent on Thailand for much of the food to supply her capital, Vientiane,
which is the largest town i n the country. This is not to say that Laos has
no potential for economic growth. With proper development of trans-
portation, for example, some areas could become rice exporters, and
forests could be exploited. (The prospect of a d a m to be constructed
near Vientiane which would supply hydroelectric power under - the Mekong
River Development Program holds future promise for Vientiane and ulti-
mately other areas of Laos as well . )
Added to these problems is a great ethnic diversity. The ethnic
Lao may well be a minority in their own country, and most 3f the major
ethnic groups, including the Lao themselves, are but parts of much larger
populations found across the borders in Thailand, China, and Vietnam.
Although no good census materials are available (see population
table below, and Halpern 196 IA; 1964B, table 9), about half the population
of Laos can be considered "minority" or "tribal. " The Lao officials like
to speak of four different groups: the Lao, the tribal Tai, the Lao Theng, 2
and the Lao Xung.
The Lao are the politically dominant group, and are found pri-
marily in the valley of the Mekong and its major tributaries, and in
northeastern Thailand. Most Lao are subsistence growers of wet rice.
They are Buddhists, and, though princely families exist in the towns, the
rural villages do not contain hereditary classes. Their social structure
is generally bilateral, and thus they characteristically have no wide-
spread lineages nor clans, n o r any large-scale social organizations based
or?. kinship.
The tribal Tai, including the Neua, Lue, Red, Blzck, and Phu -
Tai are generally found in the higher valleys, and also in adjacent parts
of northwestern Vietnam, southwestern China, and northern Thailand.
The Black Tai are generally considered to be "typical" in that they have
preserved much of what was apparently the traditional Tai way of life
prior to the expansion of the Tai-speaking peoples in Indochina. They
live in narrow upland valleys, where they cultivate rice, making use of
irrigation and terraces. They also do some swidden farming on mountain-
sides, and grow some opium as a cash crop. In Laas, as in northern
Vietnam (see McAlistert s paper), the Black Tai have organized them-
selves into muongs or principalities . These principalities are generally
limited to a single valley, and though some of the Tai groups in Laos
were nominally involved in the Sip Song Chao Tai (Twelve Tai Princi-
palities) of northwestern Vietnam, this loose federation had little effect
on the groups in Laos.
The Black Tai social system has three hereditary classes. The
princely class is formed of the members of two large families, the Lo and
the Cam, who apparently retain title to all the irrigated land within the
muong. Use-rights to swiddens are owned by the people who clear the land.
The princely families have ritual functions at the commencement of 'the
planting season, and in worshipping the chief god of the muong. Members
of the Luong and Ka families comprise the priestly class, which enjoys
high prestige. Priests, of whom there are three ranks, are - in charge
of other communal rites, and individual ceremonies. The other Black
Tai families form the commoner class, from which are drawn the farmers,
artisans, and soldiers. Commoners who use irrigated land must pay a tax,
in labor, to village or muong officials. Most of the Black Tai population
lives in small villages which are under the control of the chao muong, or -- prince.
The Black Tai are largely self-sufficient, making for themselves
most of what they consume. There are Chinese shops in market towns
and itinerant Chinese merchants who visit the villages, but the Black Tai
have had little cash to spend on manufactured goods.
Hickey (1958) argues that the location of the Black Tai in upland
valleys, away from the Vietnamese and lowland Lao, has allowed them
to preserve much of their traditional Tai culture and to develop the frag-
mented principalities which are their characteristic socio-political
structure (1958: 206, 210). The isolation of the Black Tai from the centers
of civilization should not be over -emphasized; in spite of the fact that they
are not Buddhist, they do have their own Indian-der ived script (see Hickey
1958, Izikowitz 1962 for further information on the Black Tai).
Although in many respects the Black Tai may be typical of the
tribal Tai, there are a number of important exceptions. The Tai Lue, for
example, are Buddhists in addition to worshipping a number of typical Tai
spirits (see Moermant s paper and the summary of Lue culture -. in Le Bar,
et al. 1964: 206-213). The Lue in Laos are descendants of what was once
a fairly highly organized Chinese-influenced state in the Sip Song Pan Na
of southwestern Yunnan, and this ancient political structure still has
relevance for relations between the Lue and other groups (see Moerman
1965). Though most of the tribal Tai are predominantly subsistence agri-
culturalists, some have specialized in other occupations. Whole villages
of Tai P'ouen (Phuan) in the Tran Ninh Plateau (Xieng Khouang Province)
have specialized in blacksmithing. Their villages are located on main
trade routes, and they travel- widely to sell their wares (Izikowitz 1962: 83)
The Lao Theng label is applied to a diverse group of people who
are descendants of the indigenous proto -Indochinese. They are Mon -Khme~
speakers and include the Khmu' , T' in, Lamet, and Loven. The majority
of them arc animists, and they are predominantly dependent on swidden
rice agriculture, but some practice irrigated agriculture (e. g. Srnalley
196 1: 8). Though ordinarily they are not organized politically above the
village level, some groups, especially in the south, were able to maunt
large -scale resistance against the French colonial forces.
The Lao Xung include the Meo and Yao. They are generally
mountaintop dwellers, dependent on swidden rice agriculture for sub-
sistence, and on opium for cash income and livestock production for sale
as well as for prestige and sacrifice. They are recent migrants from the
north. The Meo who have remained in China have evidently become
quite acculturated to Ban Chinese culture (see Ruey 1960 for a brief
account of the Meo in China, and Ruey 1962 for a discussion of their
southward migration). Those who have moved to Southeast Asia reflect
Chinese influence in many aspects of their culture. They may even hire
Chinese tutors to l ive in their villages. The patrilineal social system
of the Meo, with its supra-village proliferation, is described in Barney' s
paper, and the somewhat similar system of the Yao (Iu Mien) is de-
scribed by Kandre in the Thailand section of the book (see also Iwata 1960).
The lines between the cultures of the various groups are not always
sharply drawn. The Lao Theng have frequently ''become Lao" in different
degrees. For example, Izikowitz (1951: 24) refers to Khmut who are
"identical with the Khmu ' [ but] have adopted Buddhism, " and Smalley
(1961: 4,8) refers to Khmu' who have become Buddhists and adopted the
Lao language. Srnalley also believes that thousands of fully assimilated
Lao are of Khmu ' descent. The Laotian social system is not closed, and
official policy encourages all inhabitants to consider themselves to be
Laotian. A s Barney suggests, many Meo seem to prefer to maintain their
distinct identity, though some individual Meo have also become culturally
Lao. Though Laos does not have a unified and cohesive national society,
the ethnic groups are by no means independent entities. Historically they
have been related economically and politically with lowland markets and
political-administrative systems, and are bound by rituakties to the low-
landers; and they are increasingly involved in the international and in-
ternal struggles within Laos.
The Lao population is not evenly distributed throughout the country
The elite Lao are concentrated in the civil capital (Vientiane), in the royal
capital (Luang Prabmg), and in a few old towns along the Mekong. In
addition t o the ubiquitous urban Chinese shopkeepers (see Halpern 1961),
many merchants and businessmen are Siamese Thai, or Vietnamese. The
Siamese Thai are relative newcomers in this role, and have taken advantagl
of the departure of some of the Vietnamese since 1954, plus the intensifi-
cation of trade which has come with increased foreign aid (see Chalermnit
1961: 55). The fact that the urban population is small indicates the limited
economic development of Laos; the fact that the urban population is
largely non-Lao is a further indication that the fate of the Lao is not com-
pletely in their own hands (see Halpern 1964B: 15-19 for a discussion of
urban patterns).
There is a great gap in Laos between the few wealthy urbanized
French-educated elite and the mass of the people who are subsistence agri-
culfruralists (see Halpern 1964B: Table 29 for an exposition of rural-urban
ddterences). The separation is reinforced by poor communication systems, 3 lack of education in rural areas, and lack of economic development. 4
Buddhism and the symbolic presence of royalty have helped give a feeling
5 of nationhood to the Laotians, but obviously the country is not a well - . integrated unit. Despite a degree of ritual interaction with the lowland
Lao, common religion does not serve as a bond for the tribal people,
most of whom are animists (see Barneyy s paper for the role of religion
as a symbol of ethnic difference). The Luang Prabang princes fight among
themselves, and the ruling family of Champassak contests with them for
the allegiance of at least the southern Laotians.
The distribution of ethnic groups of Laos does not correspond to
international boundaries. The Laos -Thailand border has been subject to
change for centuries, reflecting the relative strengths of the Laotian and
Thai princes. The Lao and northeastern Thai dialects are indistinguish-
able across the border (in fact there are nine t imes as many Lao-speakers
in Thailand as there are in Laos); trade and kinship connections are main-
tained except as internal and international conditions prohibit them ( see
Chalermnit 1961: 44-45). Indeed, in the last three or four generations,
people have found themselves living in Laos or Thailand depending on inter -
national events of no immediate concern to themselves (i. e. , modifications
of the border as a result of agreements between the British and French
in the 1880 ' s, the subsequent readjustment with the aid of the Japanese in
World W a r Two, and a return to the earlier border at the end of the war).
A s is demonstrated elsewhere in this volume (Kandre's paper), until
recently the borders have not proved any barrier to the movement of tribal
and minority people (such as Yao, Meo, Khmu', and various Tai groups),
and they too maintain kinship and other connections across the boundaries.
The same situation has existed along the Chinese and Vietnamese borders,
which everywhere cut across ethnic distributions. This is significant when
one considers North Vietnamese presence in Laos and influence among the
Pathet Lao. Historically there appears to have been a consistent trend of
migration by both Lao and tribal grmps southward, particularly to the
southeast, as a result of recurrent wars as well as population pressures
emanating from Yunnan. The Yao and.Meo provide perhaps the most dra-
matic example of this movement, a trend that continues with current war-
fare.
The connection between tribe and nation in Laos has varied con-
siderably between different tribes. The prior ownership of the land by the
"Kha" tribes i s stiU recognized in its symbolization in royal ceremonies,
as is the story of the subjection of these autocthones by the Lao (Srnalley
1961: 6 ; Archaimbault 1964). ''Kha" means "slave" in the Lao language,
and "Kha" people, such as the Khmul, have been liable for corvee labor.
But other than ritual recognition there is little or no participation by the
unassimilated "Khau in the Royal Lao Government above the level of di s -
trict chief (tasseng), the next to lowest level of rural administration: By
contrast, the Meo of Xieng KLhauang have had representatives and even
ministers in the Royal government (Barney's paper).
The French did not go out of their way to develop or - reinforce
tribal units by setting up separate administrative devices for them as
they did in the Vietnamese Central Plateau (where the French attempted
direct administration of the tribal people) or in Tonkin (where they en-
countered strongly organized Tai minorities and preserved traditional
political appearances while trying to manipulate elected or appointed
leaders). Because of their opium production, tribesmen (in distinction
to the Lao lowlanders) were offered some concessions--but these were
in the form of relief from taxes, not recognition of tribal sovereignty. 6
The reactions of various groups to the problems 01 assirnil-ation
have often been quite different. Typically the Khmu have been rather
passive and submissive, whereas the Meo have been aggressive in their
relations with the Lam7 Differences in Khmu' and Meo reactions are
reflected in their recent messianic cults, which are supposed to lead them
to a better life. Among the Khmu7 the messiah is depicted as an omnipo-
tent king for whom they should show respect by stopping all work and con-
suming all their resources in feasts. The messiah wil l then appear am0r.g
them, or they will visit him in his cave, and he will make available to t-hem
all the material trappings of Western civilization which are presently denied
them. By contrast the Meo messianic myth foresees Jesus Christ as the
messiah, appearing among them in a jeep, giving them arms and summon-
ing them to action. According to this myth the Meo wil l dspose the
local Lao officials, and then wil l take over the national capital (Halpern
1960: 63).
W e can also compare Khmu' and Me0 economic and political in-
tegration. Thmgh the Khmu' occasionally produce agricultural sur-
pluses for sale, they are primarily subsistence farmers- Their economi
relations with the Lao are as subjects for corv6e labor, sometimes as hi^
agricultural workers or servants, and as participants in markets for basi
commodities and tools (Izikowitz 195 1; Smalley 196 1). Apparently some I
their economic relations were mediated through the institution of the lam, - a Lao middleman (Halpern 19648: 94-95). By contrast the Meo are pro-
ducers of an important cash crop, opium, and are relatively prosperous.
One may guess that the original basis of the special Meo relationship with
the Lao Governor of Xieng Khouang may have been control of opium pro-
duction and trade, since Xieng Khouang was the only province in Laos
where production of opium was legalized by the French.
The tribal groups do not appear to be unified political entities in
Laos, as some groups in Burma and Annam have been. There is evidently
some suptra-village organization among some of the groups such as the
Meo and Yao (see Barneyr s and Kandre' s papers), who are relative'new-
comers to Laos, but nothing on the level of the Shan principalities seems
to have existed to r ival even the limited power of the Lao princes. The
minority Tai in Laos seem not to have been organized so well as were -- the Sip Song Chao Tai of northern Vietnam ( see McAlister ' s paper and
Hickey 1958). Nonetheless, some of the tribal peoples were able to
resist French control fiercely during the colonial period ( s e e Halpern
1964: 80 ff. ). The tribal peoples of Laos historically appear to have
been involved in a shifting series of extra-village alliances dependent
in large measure on the waxing and waning of local petty states. It is
only in this century that unitary state control has begun to be imposed.
(The same type of situation has existed in ethnically similar northern
Thailand, where only in the last fifty years has the Bangkok-based Thai
government attempted to regulate cornpr ehensively the lives of the tribal
peoples. ) The preceding period was hardly one of autonomy of individual
tribal units, however; such interpretations are founded on lack of
historical knowledge, admittedly difficult to obtain when documents w e r e
lacking, fragmentary, or hard to come by (for historical data on a spe-
cific group see, e . g. , Kunskadter 1965: 1-7).
Tribesmen are considered to be citizens of Laos, but most of
them have no special representation in the government. A few Meo (for
example, Touby Lyfong and General Vang Pao) have reached high office
under the Royal Lao Government, but it is unclear whether they have done
so as individuals, or because they were selected as representatives of
minority interests (see Barneyt s paper). It is clear, however, that the
Royal Lao Government has not attempted to organize minority interests;
it appears that they do not want the minorities to become organized as
such. Tribesmen were not systematically recruited into the Royal Lao
Army until 1961, when United States Army Special Forces detachments
arrived in Laos; simultaneously the United States was supporting a national
army composed largely of ethnic Lao (Dommen 1964: 272). Likewise, the
government has in the past ruled against the publication of tribal languages,
apparently aut of fear that this would reduce the possibility of assimilation
of tribal populations. More recently , however, a Meo language newspaper
has been published (see Barneyrs paper), and broadcasts are b e i ~ g made
in Meo (see Osbornt s paper).
Fall (1965: 173 ff . ) has pointed out that the split between the Pathet
Lao and the Rightists follows l ines of very old ethnically-based actagonisms.
Most of the Pathet Lao-controlled areas (generally areas away from the
Mekong valley) have traditionally been inhabited by minority Tai and tribal
peoples (Fall 1965: 191). The Pathet Lao control Phong Saly and Sam Neua
Provinces. In part this is due to geography--these provinces adjoin China
and North Vietnam. In part the Pathet Lao control is due to politics- -they
were forced to withdraw from other provinces but were allowed to stay in
Phong Saly and Sam Neua as a result of the 1954 Geneva Accords (Fall 1965:
1'19 -180). But their strength also lies in the ethnic composition of the two
provinces--about two thirds of the population of Sam Neua is minority Tai,
and over one half of the population of Phong Saly is "Kha" (see Halpern r
1964B: 11, and sources listed for Table 9). In fact the Lao appear to be
in the majority only in Vientiane, Khammouane, Savannakhet, and Cham-
pass* Provinces (ibid. ). It is in the areas where the ethnic Lao are in
the minority that the Pathet Lao have been most successful in creating a
communist administrative structure parallel to that of the Royal. Lao
Government. The Pathet Lao claimed in 1965 to control two -thirds of
the territory of Laos and nearly half of the population ( ~ a l 1965: 183).
A s in North Vietnam (see McAlister ' s paper) the Communists
have generally been quite successful in their appeals to the minority and
tribal peoples, who have been mobilized in aiding the revolutionary strug-
gle. Where the Pathet Lao have failed to gain the support of tribal people
(e . g., among the followers of Touby Lyfong) it apparently has been due
in part to pre-existing alliances and antagonisms among the Meo them-
selves (see Barney' s paper).
B y contrast with the Royal Lao Government, the Pathet Lao, from
the time of their founding, consciously incorporated minority interests,
and have continued to emphasize appeals to ethnic groups. Whereas the
Royal Lao Government officially does not recognize tribal languages, the
Pathet Lao have developed a Meo script presumably closely related. to
that developed for the Meo in adjacent areas of North Vietnam (~ ie tnam
Courier 37:6, Oct. 7, 1965). The Pathet Lao have sent specialists from
the Meo and other tribal groups to school in North Vietnam, Peking, - and Moscow, as well as t o their own schools in the communist-controlled
provinces of Laos (Fall 1965: 183).
Faydang, a Meo leader who was one of the original founders of the
Pathet Lao movement along with Prince Souvannavong, seems to have been
used precisely for the purpose of winning Meo support and organizing Meo
military units (Burchett 1959: 216 ff. ). Although the differences between
Faydang's and Toubyf s followers are often referred to in terms of ide-
ology and morality ( ~ u r c h e t t describes Faydangr s burning commitment to
the Communist cause; Le ham 1 19611 characterizes Toubyf s followers
as "pirates"), Barney informs us that the split between Faydang and Touby
is of long standing. Touby's clan had traditionally been allied with the
princely family of Xieng Khouang, and Faydangt s clan (which is generally
located further ta the north) had been left out of th i s arrangement.
Sithone Komadam is another tribal leader in the Yathet Lao, whose
influence is largely with the "Kha" peoples in southern Laos. H c is the
son of a "Kha" chief who led a revolt against the French in the early 1900 's
Like Faydang, he is a vice -chairman of the Central Committee of the Neo
Lao Hak Sat (see Burchett 1959: 208 ff. ). It is interesting t o note that
Prince Boun Oum of Charnpassak, the Rightist leader, allegedly aided
the French in suppressirlg the rebellion of Sithone's father (Fall 1965: 174).
Because most of the recent fighting in Laos has occurred in the -- hill areas, the minority and tribal people who live there have been deeply
affected. Some of the problems of the tribal people in the northern part
of Laos are dealt with in the papers that follow. The people in the south-
eastern part of Laos through which supplies pass from North into South
Vietnam must also have been affected. One can easily imagine the massive
recruitment of local (tribal) labor required by the Ho Chi-Minh trail. Long-
term effects of the building of roads in tribal areas will almost certainly
reorient trade patterns, make government services more accessible and
control more effective, and wil l doubtless involve the permanent re-
location of many tribal villages. (Recent Japanese films shown on American
television depict classrooms and workshops located in caves in southeastern
Laos where tribal peoples are trained and work. This is cited as the Pathet
Lao response to American bombing). Such effects have already been noted
in past years along the Vientiane - Luang Prabang road. Roads will come
to serve the same fieeds as the Mekong and its tributaries have done for the
ethnic Lao. These effects will surely endure after peace has returned.
Paradoxically it may be in Laos, the least developed of Southeast
Asian countries, where the problems of tribal -minority -lowland relations
will have to be worked out most rapidly. In the past minority and tribal
populations could solve the problems of pressure from lowland forces
simply by fleeing higher into the mountains or further into the jungle. But
modern military technology means that today there is nowbere to hide,
and recent political developments mean that wherever they go the tribes-
men and minorities will be the target for political influence from one or
the other side of the Laotian struggle. Thus the tribal and minority people
will have to develop some sort of lasting adjustment to more continuous
contact with the lowlanders of Laos and their outside allies.
Simultaneously the lowlanders will have to t&e a more realistic
approach than simply denying the existence of minority problems or con-
c eiving of a slowly and informally evolving Laotianization through adoption
of Buddhism and increased education. The refugee relief programs are
at best a temporary solution to the problems of the displaced minority and
tribal populations.
Though Osborn and Ward speak optimistically about the accom-
plishments of the refugee relief programs, these programs are obviously
dependent on foreign aid not only for material and financial support, but
also- for the formation of their underlying policies. Similarly the Pathet
Lao have called for outside help: 'We hail and stand ready to receive
specialists and technicians of all countries who, for the sake of justice
and peace, would volunteer to help u s build and develop our economy and
culture in the liberated areas" (Pathet Lao Radio, Oct. 28, 1965). 'Mean-
while they boast of their new irrigation projects and schools, and denounce
United States-supported programs of the Royal Lao Government as ruses
to fool the people.
The recognition now being given to tribal and minority peoples
in these programs--for the first time many are receiving government-
sponsored health, education, and welfare services--the incorporation
of some of these people into military and political organizations, and
the deliberate cultivation of minorities by the Pathet Lao and Nor th
Vietnamese means that formal relations between central government
and minorities can never again be simply ignored. The tribes and
minorities are increasingly literate, increasingly aware of the outside
world, and (with modern military training and weapons) increasingly
able to exert real influence. Laotian attitudes and policies toward
tribesmen do seem to be changing, at least with respect to the Meo.
Tauby Lyfong and General Vang Pao hold important positions; in spite
of a law against the printing of tribal languages, a Meo newspaper is
being distributed, and broadcasts are being made in tribal languages
over government radios.
We cannot stress too strongly that as far back as records exist
the tribal people of Laos have never lived in isolated static communities.
Villages moved every few decades, and longer term stability was the
exception. But, although they were not isolated in the past, the contacts
were largely limited to the borders of the tribal communities. Much of
the trade took place outside of the community, and w a s either mediated
through an agent such as the lam ( in the case of the Khmu'), or was car- -
r ied out by Chinese traders who brought their goods to the mountain - villages. Tribesmen such as the Khmu' or Lamet worked fo r wages
among the lowland Lao, or even crossed into Thailand for work--the
locus of this work w a s outside the tribal communities, and the wages
were used for traditional purchases of prestige goods or tools which
did not disrupt tribal community patterns. Ritually the Khmuf played
an important part in lowland Lao state ceremonies, but again this was
outside of t h e sphere of Khmu' communal religion. If missionaries
came to the tribes they w e r e as representatives of completely alien
(Western) societies. Politically the village headmen of the Yao and
Meo functioned as intermediaries between the lowland government and
the villagers, most of whom had little or no direct contact with the
government. Such assimilation as tcok place (and much did take place
both on an individual and a community level) was not the resu l t of de-
liberate policy on the part of the lowlanders.
The situation has changed radically since the Second World War.
Tribal communities are rnuch more directly penetrated by lowlanders,
and tribesmen have begun to take a much more direct role i n lowland
society. The tribesmen have been deeply involved in the civil wars of
Laos. Their economies, especially in the refugee areas, have been ex-
tensively modified--many have become completely dependent on air'lifts
for subsistence. Politically they have become involved at the top levels
of the Pathet Lao, and at least a few Meo have reached high positions in
the Royal Lao Government. Even small rural communities have become
the targets for direct attempts at political influence by both sides.
Apparently the Meo will play a key role in any future develop-
ments. It seems to have been recognized by all s ides that the Meo are
the tribal people most suitable for organization into military and political
units, and have received aid and attention t o a much greater extent than
have other minority and tribal peoples. In this respect the Pathet Lao
have a built-in advantage in their close alliance with North Vietnam,
where there are some 220,000 Meo, several times the number in Laos,
concentrated in the formally recognized Meo districts of Thua-Chua and
M u Cang Chai in the Tay Bac Autonomous Zone which borders on the
Pathet Lao controlled parts of Laos (Fall 1963: 150-151).
The question remains how much ei ther t h e Royal Lao Government
or the Pathet Lao will be willing to accommodate the tribes and minori-
ties in attempting to build national unity when the immediate political-
military problems are resolved and massive foreign aid is withdrawn.
If the two opposing governments continue to control their respective
territories, contrasting social systems may develop, as has happened for
example in N o r t h and South Korea or North and South Vietnam. One major
contrast which might be expected to develop would be in local governmental
institutions which would deeply affect tribal- and minority peoples. If, - after the present struggle, one side attains a monopoly of power in Laos,
that side will have secured for itself the major rights to grapple with the
problems of state formation. In this they will be influenced in large
measure by the evolving patterns of their patrons. Xf Laos manages to
avoid incorporation by North Vietnam and/or Thailand, neither the pattern
of autonomous zones of the former, nor the basically traditional structure:
of the latter will suffice as a model for national unity in Laos. This is
true because of the preponderance in the population of Laos of ethnic group
without traditions of centralized administration. Looking beyond the con -
temporary deep involvement in Southeast Asia of Weste rn powers (now
mainly the United States) hopefully some lasting form of regional inte -
gration may develop, perhaps based on the mast positive program in the
area to date, the Lower Mekong development scheme (Schaaf and Fifield
1963).
FOOTNOTES
-
1. The Chinese HB had recently burned Luang Prabang, which had
also been threatened by the Black Flags of the tribal Tai from north-
western Vietnam, when the French established the Protectorate. The
Siamese, who had earlier promised protection, had taken hostages to
Bangkok, and had failed to give the Laotians relief from the raiders
(Dommen 1964: 9-10; a detailed account of this period is found in
Pavie s journal}. Thus it is understandable why the elite among the
valley Lao considered themselves "Children of the French Peace. "
In view of the past relationships and present military realities
it is not surprising that the Vietnamese on one side and the Siamese Thai
on the other hold Laos in rather low esteem, as an underdeveloped ru ra l
hinterland which needs assistance in throwing off the yoke of its self-
appointed protectors. Examples of these attitudes are found in the writing
of the North Vietnamese correspondent, Le Kham (1961: 2 ff. ) who speaks
01 the "simplet' Pathet Lao in the Xieng Khouang "cow country" which
lacks paved roads. The editor of the Thai Chalermnit Press in introduc-
ing a book by his Laos correspondent (1961) w r i t e s of the humble food,
poor accommodations, and poor roads with which the correspondent must
cope. Later in the book the correspondent goes on to describe how'easily
the Thai could make money in Laos. "The Thai people.. . crossed over -- in big numbers.. . to Vientiane., . where they found no competition since
the Lao were not commercial-minded and Laos still lacked technical
men. It was easy therefore for Thai nationals to come and earn a much
higher income in Laos.. . .The Lao did not even know how to grow rice
and vegetables or raise stock properly. . . " (Chalermnit 196 1: 7 1).
2. As used in this paper the term Lao refers to the valley Lao, who
are also called Lao Lum. The tribal Tai are sometimes called the Lao
Tai. The Lao Theng (or Thenh, or Theung), meaning "mountainside
people" are sometimes referred to by the pejorative term "Kha, " mean-
ing ''slave. " Lao Xung (or Sung) means "mountaintop people, " and includes
the Meo and Yao (or Man).
3. Until recently secular public and private school education above
the primary level has been confined to urban areas, and has been available
to only a small portion of the population. U. S, aid programs have brought
schools to some rural , tribal, and refugee areas. See Hdlpern (1964A:
Table 8) for an indication of the geographic limitations of the school system.
See Schanche (1962) for a popular accourlt of one of the American aid pro-
grams to tribal schools. See Barney' s paper for a discussion of Meo
schools. The communists have also been active in promoting education in
their "liberated" areas, and have paid special attention to Meo schools - and the schooling of other minorities. A recent North Vietnamese publi-
cation claims that in 1964 36,200 children were enrolled in schools in
"liberated areas, " with an additional 250 in secondary schools. Pre-
sumably most of these are tribal people. Secular schools have been
scarce in this area, and these are impressive figures even if exaggerated
(Fall 1965: 183; Vietnam Courier 37: 6, October 7 1965).
4. The elite of Laos is by no means a completely closed kinship group,
but kinship connections may be used to cement other social ties. Po-
sition in the elite may be achieved with money, education, and good fortune
or power (on structure of the elite see Halpern 1964A: 5-7, 28 ff . ) . Social
mobility through the military has become increasingly important. Kong Le ,
a "KhaV by birth, achieved his meteoric rise through the army. At first
he was trained by the French and fought against the Viet Minh. Later he
received training from the Americans. He reinforced his social position
in 1959 by h i s third marriage, to the niece of socially prominent Laotian
General Ouan Ratikon, Kong Le's base of influence is in the army, not
particularly among the southern tribal people (see Dommen 1964: 143 ff.
for the story of Kong Le ' s career).
5. Even the Pathet Lao continue t o appeal to the King as a symbol of
national unity ( e . g . , broadcast of Radio Hanoi reporting Pathet Lao mani-
festo, 28 October 1965).
6. See Halpern (1964B: 115 -1 18) regarding current features of the
opium trade, and Reinach (1901: 310) for an example of early French
interests in expanding opium production. See Barney1 s paper regarding
influence of opium on Meo-Lao relations in Xieng Khouang Province.
7. The Meo messianic myth may also be a reflection of their in-
strumental attitude toward the Christian religion, and their identification
of Christianity with modern Western technology and power.
8. The following is a section of the Action Program adopted at the
Second National Congress of the Neo Lao Hak Sat (the political branch of
the Pathet Lao) in Sam Neua Province, April 6- 11, 1964, as reported by
the Vietnam News Agency, Hanoi, April 13, 1964 (cited in Dornrnen
1964: 319):
1. To unite al the people, unite various nationalities
(tribal groups), strata, religious communities,
political parties, patriotic personalities, and in-
tellectuals, including individuals in the Royal
Family and Buddhist monks and nuns who favor
peace and neutrality, regardless of their political
tendencies, beliefs and religion. . .
The closest analogous appeal of the Royal government seems to
be the following statement by Prim2 Minister Prince Souvanna Phouma,
on January 1, 1965, published in a news release of the Royal Embassy
of Laos, Washington, February 8, 1965:
We must remember also that a large segment of our
rural population lacks many commodities, relief,
social secur i ty services, that many who live in towns
find quite natural to receive from the State. Thinkof
our countrymen in the mountains, the countryside and
the plateaus of the interior, who enjoy none of these
benefits. We may guess what kind of hostile propaganda
can be made of this. It certainly has other objectives,
but it vividly exposes all these inequalities. . . we should
str ive to reduce or eliminate them.
9. Other tribesmen have also been recruited in large numbers by the
Pathet Lao (Fall 1965: 187). But the Pathet Lao Radio (July 26, 1965)
acknowledges the effectiveness of Meo fighting on the side of the Royal Lao
Government: ". . . Meo bandits are under the direct command of U. S. of -
ficers who have trained them with weapons. The U. S. imperialists. have
used these Meo bandits to carry out destructive acts against the Laotian
nation. . . The U. S. imperialists are now planning to set UJ a Meo force
with a view to partitioning the country and separating the Meo people, who
have lived in Laos for generations, from the Laotian people. "
10. Despite these changes Barney reports tha t the traditional Meo
social structure has survived the rigors of continuous warfare and flourishe
even in the refugee camps. This may well mean that the Meo will. emerge
with an even stronger sense of identity and better means for inter-village
social organization than they had before the war . For hundreds of years,
starting in China, the Meo have had to cope with centralized governments.
Apparently they gave up lowland plow agriculture as they fled Chinese per-
secution. Xn the mountainous areas of northern Indochina they have adapted
themselves to contact with central governments by living in the mountains
and relying on a valuable cash crop, opium, to give them a high standard
of living. Now that some of them have been forced by the war into the low-
lands, w i l l they be willing to return to the mountains when the w a r is over?
BIBLIOGRAPHY
There is an extensive body of French literature on the peoples of
Indochina, but much of it is devoted t o language and religion. Information
on economy, social, and political structure of tribal and minority groups
in Laos gathered by professional social scientists is scarce. Unfortunately
no extensive economic study exists for the hill areas comparable to that
of Gaudillot and Condominas (1959). Izikowitz ' landmark monograph on
the Lamet (1951) shows what an anthropologist can do when he considers
problems of inter -relations between tribe and lowland, rather than thinking
of tribes as isolates. The lack of publications specifically on Laos is
partially compensated for by studies of overlapping populations in neighboring
countries (e. g. , Abadie 1924, Bernatzik 1946).
W o r k s of special relevance to the subjects covered in this book are
listed below.
ABADIE, MAURICE
1924 Les races du Haut-Tonkin de Phong-Tho 2
Lang Son. Paris, Societe dlEditions
GEographiques, Mar itimes et C oloniales.
ARCHAIMBAULT, CHARLES
1964 Religious structures in Laos. Journal of the
Siam Society 52 ( I ) : 57-74. Gives information
on the ritual relations between "Kha" g r o u p and
the Royal government,
AYME, G.
1931 Monographiedu~~TerritoireMilitaire.
Paris, Exposition Colonials Internationale.
BARNEY, GEORGE LINWOOD
1957 TheMeo: anincipientchurch. Practical
Anthropology 4.
BERNATZE, HUGO ADOLF
1947 A h a und Meau: Probleme der angewanten Vlllkerkunde in
Hinterlindien. Innsbruck, Wagnerische Universittlts
Buchdruckerei.
BOCK, CARL
1884 Temples and elephants. London.
BURCHETT, W. G.
1959 Mekong upstream: a visit to Laos and Cambodia. Berlin,
Seven Seas Publishers. Presents the Communist view of
the Laotian situation with background information on -the
role of tribal. people in the Pathet Lao.
CHALERMNIT PRESS CORRESPONDENT - 1961 BattleofVientiane3960(with historical background
leading to battle). Bangkok, C haler mnit Press.
COLONNA, M.
1938 Monographic de la province de Saravane. Bulletin
des Amis du Laos, 2.
DOMMEN, ARTHUR J.
1965 Conflict in Laos: the politics of neutralization.
New York, Praeger. A synoptic account of the
political events in Laos since the Second World War ,
with an extensive bibliography.
FALL, BERNARD
1963 ThetwoViet-Narns: apolit icalandmilitaryanalysis.
London and Dunmow, Pall Mall Press.
1965 The Pathet Lao: a "liberation party, " in The Communist -
revolution in Asia: Tactics, goals, and achievements, ed.
Robert A. Scalapino. Englewood Cliffs, N. J., Prentice-
Hall, Inc.
r n I S S E , ANDRE - 1951 Les villages du plateau de Bolovens. Bulletin de la
Soci6te des Etudes Xndochinoises.
GAUDILLOT, CLAUDE and GEORGES CONDOMINAS
1959 LaPlainedeVientiane: rapportdrktude, TomesI-III,
Royaume du Laos, Commissariat au Plan, Octobre 1959.
Paris, Bureau pour le Development de la Production
Agricole.
HALPERN, BARBARA and JOEL M.
1964 Laos and America - a retrospective view.
Swth Atlantic Quarterly, WCIII, 2, 175-187.
HALPERN, JOEL M.
1960 Laos and her tribal problems. Michigan
Alumnus Quarterly Review, 67 : 59 -67.
196lA Population Statistics and associated data.
Laos Project Paper No. 3. Los Angeles,
University of California. Mimeographed.
1961B The role of the Chinese in Lao society.
Journa l of t h e Siam Society XLlX ( 1 ) : 21 -46.
1964A Government, politics, and social structure - in Laos: a study of tradition and innovation.
New Haven, Yale University, Southeast A s i a
Studies, Monograph Series, No. 4.
1964B Economy and society of Laos: a brief
survey. New Haven, Yale University, Southeast
Asia Studies, Monograph Series, No. 5. These
two monographs contain much basic data, the
second includes an extensive general bibliography.
1965 Laos, future prospects and their limitations.
Asian Survey, VI, 1: 59 -65.
HICKEY, GERALD C.
1958 Social systems of northernVietnam. Chicago,
University of Chicago, Department of
Anthropology, Ph. D. dissertation.
Contains a description of several northern
Vietnam ethnic groups and includes material
on the Black Tai of Nam Tha, Laos.
IWATA, KXIJI - 1959 Ethnic groups in the valley of the Mam Song
and Nam Lik: their geographic distribution
and some aspects of social change. Japanese
Jaurnal of Ethnology. Also published in
mimeographed form in English as Laos Project
Paper No. 15, ed. Joel M. Halpern, Los Angeles,
University of California, 1961.
1960 Kokubu Laos no Shosu Minzoku. Shillin, 1.
Also published in mimeographed form in English
as Minority groups in northern Laos, especially the
Yao, Laos Project Paper No. 16, e d . Joel M. Halpern.
Los Angeles, University of California, 1961.
lZXICOWITZ, KARL GUSTAV
195 1 Lamet: hil.1 peasants in French Indochina.
Guteborg, Etnografiska Museet, Etnologiska
Studier 17. The best general ethnography
on a Laotian tribal group, giving an extensive-
account of the relationship between the Lamet
hill people and the lowland people of Laos and
Thailand.
1962 Notes about t h e Tai. The Museum of Far Eastern
Antiquities ~tockholm 1 , Bulletin 34: 73 -9 1.
KAUFMAN, HOWARD K -.
1963 Nationalism and problems of refugee and ethnic
minority resettlement. In Proceedings of the -
Ninth Pacific Science Congress, 1957, 3: 170-174.
KENE, THAO
19 58 Bibliographie du Laos. Vientiane, Edition du
C omit6 Litter air e
KUNSTADTER, PETER
19 65 The Luar (~awa) of Northern Thailand: aspects of
social structure, agriculture, and religion. Princeton,
N. J. , Princeton Universi ty , Center of International
Studies, Research Monograph 21.
LAFONT, PIERRE BERNARD
19 64 B ibliographie du Laos. Publications de
1 ' Ecole Fran~aise d ' Extreme Orient, vol. 1.
Paris, Ecole Francaise d 1 Extreme Orient. An
extensive critical bibliography, especially for
F r e n c h sources.
LE BAR, FRANK M. and ADRIENNE SUDDARD, eds .
1960 Laos: itspeople, i t ssociety , itsculture.
New Haven, HRAF Press. A general summary
of social science data on Laos.
LE BAR, F. M. and I;. C. HICKEY, J. K. MUSGRAVE - 1964 Ethnic Groups of ~ a i n l a n d Southeast Asia.
New Haven, HItAF Press.
LE KHAM
1961. From the Plaine des Jarres to Ban Ban l an
article appearing in Van Hoc (The Letters),
no. 135, 24 February 1961, pp. 1, 6, 7, 14
and no. 136, 3 March 1961, pp. 14-18]. Trans-
lation by U . S. Joint Publications Research
Service, Washington, D. C. JPRS: 9307.
MATHIEU, A. R.
1959 Chronological table of the history of Laos.
In Kingdom of Laos. France-Asie, English - edition, pp. 32-49.
MOERMAN, MICHAEL
1965 Ethnic identification in a complex civilization:
who are the Lue'? American Anthropologist 67
( 5 , i) : 1215-1230.
MURPHY, CHARLES J. V,
1965 Thailand's fight to the finish. Fortune WCKII
(4 ) : 122-127; 266, 270, 272, 274, 276. October.
PAVIE, AUGUSTE -
1898- Mission Pavie en Indochine. 1879-1895. 10 vols.
1919 Paris, Leroux.
REINACH, LUCIEN DE
1901 LeLaos. Paris, A. Charles, Librairie-
Editeur . 2 vols. (Translated by the Human
Relations A r e a Files, Indochina source no. 149).
A basic source for the colonial period.
RUEY YLII-FU
1960 The Magpie Miao of southern Szechuan. - In Social
structure in Southeast Asia, G . P. Murdock, ed.
New York, Wenner -Gr en Foundation for Anthropo-
logical Research, Viking Fund Publications in Anthro
pology, 29: 143-155.
1962 TheMiao: their originandsouthwardmigration.
Taipei, International Association of Historians of Asia,
Second Biennial Conference Proceedings, pp. 179-190.
1930 HistoiredesMiao. Hongkong, Imprimeriedela
Soci4te des Missions-etrangeres de Paris.
SCHAAF, C. HART and RUSSELL H. FIFIELD - 1963 The Lower Mekong:- challenge to cooperation in
Southeast Asia. Princeton, N. J. , Van Nostrand.
SCHANCHE, DON A.
1962 An American hero: the exclusive story of how an
American farmer has devoted his life to a one man
crusade for freedom and democracy in war-torn,
C ommunisi -inf iltrated Laos. Saturday Evening Post
235:15-21; 91-95. June 2, June 9.
A journalistic account of the work of Edgar "Pop"
Buell among the Meo.
SHEEHAN, NEIL
1965 North Vietnamese fear B-52' s, a deserter reports
i n Saigon. New York Times, 2 1 December 1965.
SMALLEY, WILLIAM A.
1956 The Gospel and the cultures of Laos.
Practical Anthropology 3:47-57. Contains a
description of the relationship between some
tribal groups and the Lao.
1961 Ethnographic notes on the Khrnu' of Northern Laos.
Manuscript notes prepared for the Human Relations Area
Files, December 15. These notes are incorporated in part
in Ethnic Groups of Mainlw-d Southeast Asia, F. Le Bar, et
al. , eds. , 1964.
SUTHERLAND, HENRY - 1963 Dr. - ~ o o l e y ' s ex-pilot sees division of Laos;
USC graduate student, back from 10-mo. visit,
says nation is lost as neutral. Los Angeles
Times, Sun. May 12, Sec. 13, p. 2. Report of an
interview with Ted Werner who gives an account
of Chinese penetration into northern Laos.
- PERIODICALS
NEW YORK TIMES, New York.
VIETNAM COURIER, Hanoi.